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Philadelphia city council close to approving major program funded by soda tax money

Nearly one year after passing a soda/sugary drinks tax, the Philadelphia City Council has given initial approval for a new infrastructure program called Rebuild, towards which a portion of the tax money will go.

Nearly one year after passing a soda/sugary drinks tax, the Philadelphia city council has given initial approval for a new infrastructure program called Rebuild, towards which a portion of the tax money will go.

A city council committee voted on June 15 to approve a bill that will determine how funds for the proposed Rebuild program will be distributed, Curbed Philadelphia reports. The Rebuild program, which will be voted on next week, would renovate Philadelphia’s aging infrastructure, according to Philly Voice.

“Today’s hearing was a critical step towards launching Rebuild,” David Gould, deputy director of community engagement for the project, said in a statement, per Philly.com. “The amendments allow us to target resources to the areas that need it most, while also maximizing diversity on work sites and delivering projects efficiently and effectively.”

The new legislation allows a service agreement between the city and the Philadelphia Authority for Industrial Development (PAID), according to Philly Voice. The Rebuild program is projected to cost $500 million, and $300 million of it will come from bond borrowing that the city will finance through soda tax revenue, Curbed reports.

The city will also receive a $100 million grant from the William Penn Foundation, which funds education, cultural and watershed protection initiatives, according to Curbed and the foundation. The grant is the largest the foundation has ever given.

The Rebuild program has been a central component of Mayor Kenney’s administration agenda, Curbed reports. The new bill specifies that, under Rebuild, PAID’s funds that are earmarked for the program will go towards “improvements to, and construction, demolition, renovation and equipping of, the City’s parks, libraries, playgrounds, recreation centers and other related facilities, and related costs such as workforce diversity and inclusion programs, community engagement and program administration."

“This will be a wonderful program,” Philadelphia City Council President Darrell L. Clarke said after the vote, according to Philly.com. “We’re looking forward — I know I am — to the first groundbreaking as soon as possible.”

Negotiations also led the council to secure two council appointees on the Rebuild oversight board and annual approval of the line-item budget and the list of Rebuild sites that the administration selects, Philly.com reports. City council will also be able to approve budgets for each project and the public or private entities that work on each project, according to Curbed.

“Council went through a long and arduous process to vote for a soda tax,” Clarke said, per Philly.com. “It would make sense that Council, as the legislative body … would also be in the process as it relates to the implementation.”

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